
Stephen Flynn says he would rather 'wash his hair' than meet Donald Trump when President visits Scotland
The leader of the SNP at Westminster has quipped he would find "any excuse possible" to avoid meeting Donald Trump when the US President arrives in Scotland later this week.
Stephen Flynn joked today he would be "busy getting a haircut, or washing my hair" when the Republican leader arrives in Aberdeenshire to open a new golf course at his Menie Estate.
Trump is expected to meet separately with John Swinney and Keir Starmer in the Granite City during his Scottish trip, before the President spends time at his Turnberry golf resort in South Ayrshire.
Flynn, MP for Aberdeen South, confirmed today he would not be meeting the New Yorker when he arrives north of the Border.
He told the BBC: "It's absolutely right that John does meet him, as the First Minister of Scotland. We've got one of the most senior politicians on the planet coming to Aberdeen. So it's absolutely right John meets him in a respectful fashion.
"I don't think the UK should be rolling out the red carpet later on this year. I'll not be meeting the President, I'll be busy getting a haircut, or washing my hair, or finding any excuse possible to make sure that I'm looking after my own toddler at the time time."
Swinney said last week his forthcoming meeting with Trump presents an "opportunity" for Scotland.
The First Minister said most Scots said most Scots would expect him "to engage, promote and pursue the interests of the country" when he speaks with the US President.
The Republican leader revealed he would meet with Keir Starmer in Aberdeen, which he described as the "oil capital of Europe". There is no date or venue confirmed for Trump's meeting with Swinney but the Record understands it is likely to be the Granite City.
Swinney said: "I think most people would expect their First Minister to meet with the President of the United States. It's an opportunity for me to set out the issues that concern people in Scotland, and also issues we might want to make some headway with."
The First Minister continued: "I understand there will be people who don't agree that I should take forward this meeting. I understand where they're coming from. But I'm the First Minister, and I think members of the public would expect me to engage, promote and persue the interests of the country.
"I think it's important that where I have an opportunity to influence issues that will affect Scotland, I should take it."

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Times
26 minutes ago
- Times
Trump praises Sydney Sweeney's ad campaign and criticises Taylor Swift
President Trump has praised Sydney Sweeney for starring in the 'hottest' commercial and said 'being woke is for losers' after the actress was identified as a registered Republican in Florida. Sweeney, 27, is the poster girl for an American Eagle jeans campaign that has sparked days of debate about traditional beauty standards. Trump compared the advertising campaign favourably with the recent Jaguar rebrand, which he described as a 'seriously woke advertisement' and a 'total disaster'. 'Sydney Sweeney, a registered Republican, has the 'hottest' ad out there. It's for American Eagle, and the jeans are 'flying of the shelves'. Go get 'em Sydney!' Trump wrote on Truth Social. In the same post, Trump also criticised the 'woke singer' Taylor Swift, having previously clashed with the 35-year-old when she endorsed Kamala Harris at last year's election. He said: 'Ever since I alerted the world as to what she was by saying on TRUTH that I can't stand her (HATE!). She was booed out of the Super Bowl and became NO LONGER HOT. The tide has seriously turned — Being WOKE is for losers, being Republican is what you want to be. Thank you for your attention to this matter!' A public database in Florida's Monroe county shows Sweeney, who has starred in the TV series Euphoria, The White Lotus and the romcom Anyone But You, was registered there as a Republican voter last June, only weeks after Trump was convicted in New York of criminal falsification of business records in the run-up to last year's election. Her registration was discovered by a YouTuber who said she came across it while putting together a profile of Sweeney. • The campaign features a reclining Sweeney, raising her midriff to zip up her jeans while declaring that 'genes are passed down from parents to offspring, often determining traits like hair colour, personality and even eye colour'. Turning to stare into the camera, she says: 'My jeans are blue.' This and other advertising spots featuring the same pun were received in some corners of the internet as a 'eugenicist dog-whistle' implying the genes of a blonde, white woman were superior to others'. This, in turn, was seized on by conservative commentators as proof of extremism on the American left. Stephen Cheung, the White House communications director, called it 'cancel culture run amok' and added: 'This warped, moronic and dense liberal thinking is a big reason why Americans voted the way they did in 2024. They're tired of this bullshit.' On the conservative podcast Ruthless, JD Vance, the vice-president, said his 'advice' to Democrats would be 'continue to tell everybody who thinks Sydney Sweeney is attractive a Nazi'. He added: 'You have a normal, all-American, beautiful girl doing, like, a normal jeans ad … and they have managed to so unhinge themselves over this thing.' MARIO ANZUONI/REUTERS Informed of Sweeney's party affiliation as he flew back to Washington from New Jersey on board Air Force One on Sunday night, Trump said that 'you'd be surprised at how many people are Republican'. He added: 'I'm glad you told me that. If Sydney Sweeney is a registered Republican, I think her ad is fantastic.' The podcaster Megyn Kelly claimed the advertisement marked a turning point in the presentation of beauty. 'We have been suffering with the elevation of homely people in our fashion ads and our fitness ads for years now and we are over it,' she said. 'We miss attractive people. We are sick of trying to pretend that these objectively unattractive people are the new beauty standard. They are not.' The campaign has generated controversy but American Eagle insists there is no political subtext American Eagle said the advertisement was simply about jeans, saying: 'Great jeans look good on everyone.' • Aliza Licht: Sydney Sweeney ad proves brands can be sexy again Sweeney has not responded to the controversy. It is not the first time she has become the apparently unwitting focus of an argument about her political affiliation. In 2022 she threw a party for her mother's 60th birthday in which guests wore red caps mimicking Trump's Maga slogan, bearing the legend: 'Make Sixty Great Again.' Photographs of the party showed some guests apparently wearing 'Blue Lives Matter' outfits, referencing the backlash against protests over police brutality in 2020. In a post on X Sweeney complained that 'an innocent celebration for my mom's milestone 60th birthday has turned into an absurd political statement, which was not the intention'. The following year she told Variety that there had been 'so many misinterpretations' about the party. 'The people in the pictures weren't even my family,' she said. 'The people who brought the things that people were upset about were actually my mom's friends from LA who have kids that are walking outside in the Pride parade, and they thought it would be funny to wear because they were coming to Idaho.'


Spectator
42 minutes ago
- Spectator
Kate Forbes showed real bravery
There is a certain worldly cynicism aroused by the announcement that a politician is stepping down to spend more time with their family. It was for a long time the refuge of MPs who had earned themselves an entry in the News of the World, the Who's Who of romeos, rogues and reprobates, for their activities with ladies – or young gentlemen – of the night. Less commonly, it was regarded as an admission that someone could not hack it or was frustrated by their slow progress up the greasy pole. After all, no one wants to quit politics. Contra the cynics, Kate Forbes. Scotland's deputy first minister will stand down from Holyrood at next May's elections, having somehow crammed a whole political life into ten tempestuous years. In that time, she has been a backbencher, public finance minister, finance secretary, leadership candidate, backbencher again, and finally deputy first minister and economy secretary. In her letter to first minister John Swinney, she acknowledges that 'quite rightly this job entails long days far from home' but 'I do not wish to seek re-election and miss any more of the precious early years of family life'. Forbes married her husband Alasdair, a widower, in 2021 and became stepmum to his three daughters. The following year the couple had a daughter, who is turning three. (Some men go to war, others jump out of planes, but living with five women is true bravery.) Forbes was never meant to get where she did. Upon her election to the Scottish parliament in 2016, her religious views were known and they marked her as an apostate in an era of secular progressivism. A member of the Free Presbyterian Church, Forbes's religion is not an identity category but a living faith. She believes in it all: birth, death, resurrection and salvation. The happy-clappy bits and the fire and brimstone alike. There was little chance of her progressing beyond the outer ministry in the modern, uber-liberal SNP, and she had to settle for a junior ministerial post in the Scottish government's finance department. Unfortunately for the party leadership, events overtook. The night before the 2020 budget speech, finance secretary Derek Mackay was forced to quit after a newspaper learned of his text messages to a 16 year old. Forbes, who had been allowed no real input into the budget, was thrust onto the floor of Holyrood to deliver – and be interrogated on – a speech she had only been handed hours before. She did so with such confidence and composure that even the SNP's most loyal critics commended her. That performance made her promotion to the cabinet finance post inevitable, though some more glumly considered it unavoidable. By the time Nicola Sturgeon resigned in February 2023, Forbes had established herself as a moderate, pro-business Nationalist who wanted the Scottish government to focus on prosperity rather than gender ideology, an agenda she opposed. Yet the prospect of the party moving to the centre, and especially of it being led by an evangelical Christian, prompted the SNP establishment to throw its weight behind Humza Yousaf, who was well-meaning but plainly not up to running a devolved government. In a straight fight, he would have been no match for Forbes, but instead the leadership contest was shaped by her internal enemies and the media into an inquisition on her religious beliefs. Journalists well-laden with secular prejudices delighted in making her answer for those verses of Scripture which scandalise modern sensibilities. To her credit as a Christian, but disastrously for a politician, she refused to lie or be evasive about her beliefs. When they asked her views on abortion, she told the truth. When they enquired as to her thinking about gay marriage, she did the same again. When they tried to corner her on trans rights, she was honest and took the punishment that came with it. Compelled to bear witness, she did so with her head held high, fighting the good fight and keeping the faith. It is one of the most personally admirable and politically suicidal decisions I have ever seen. In the end, she lost, though only narrowly, and was vindicated when her opponent swiftly proved as unequal to the challenges of office as she had warned. He inflicted so much damage with a programme of Continuity Sturgeon progressivism that, just 14 months later, his successor was drafting in Forbes as deputy head of the government to repair relations with the business sector, steer economic policy back to growth, and serve as the symbol of a new pragmatism. Despite our fundamental disagreements, I rate Forbes as a politician and a public official and said so regularly on Coffee House and elsewhere. This did nothing for her reputation among Nationalists. In fact, I know that it was used against her, and I'm sorry for that. Some regarded with bemusement, others horror, the sight of a gay Catholic Unionist simping for a Wee Free separatist, but the simping was not for Forbes so much as for the fleeting possibility that a leader of her calibre could get her hands on the controls. In a way, I should be relieved that she was sabotaged by the liberal bigots in her own party. If she had been half the first minister I reckon she might have been, she could have broadened the SNP's electoral coalition to the point at which independence became the consensus view across the electorate. She was a very dangerous woman for a time there, and might be again if she were to return after her children have grown up. The cynics will reassert themselves in the coming days, pronouncing that Forbes has seen the writing on the wall, that the SNP is finished, that she is hinting at her lack of faith in Swinney, that she had risen as high as she would be allowed to in a party thoroughly in the grips of identity politics progressives. Or, and I will tread lightly here, perhaps she truly values motherhood above career, one of the few remaining mortal sins in a non-judgemental age. Her fellow Nationalist Gail Ross did the same in 2021, admitting that five days a week away from her son was just too much. Not coincidentally, she too was a Highlands MSP, where constituencies rival small countries for square mileage. Labour's Jenny Marra, a considerable talent, walked away after ten years darting up and down the vast North East Scotland region. Family had to come first. Anglo culture is hardly alone in associating labour with fortitude and moral uprightness, but it is noticeably unforgiving of those who opt out in favour of raising children. Try to balance work and family but say you find it impossible, and you can expect to be chastised for failing at something so many parents do. The resentment is not for admitting you cannot manage but for forcing others to reconsider how well they are managing. I have sat in many a newsroom well into the evening, hearing bedtime stories read over the phone by loving parents who were wanted at home, and wanted to be there, but who were working late to give their children the best start in life. I'm not a parent, and maybe it's not my place to comment, but I know too many people whose fathers and mothers worked those hours, provided abundantly for their offspring, but now have no relationship with them. Their material needs were more than met but at the expense of other, deeper needs. No doubt Kate Forbes has made the right decision for her family but I can't help but wonder how many more families would have benefited from her making it to Bute House. Yes, she's hopelessly wrong about the constitution, but there's more to politics than policy. There's talent and character and leadership. We will have to settle for much less.


Scotsman
42 minutes ago
- Scotsman
Why Donald Trump's visit was a good thing for Police Scotland
Sign up to our daily newsletter – Regular news stories and round-ups from around Scotland direct to your inbox Sign up Thank you for signing up! Did you know with a Digital Subscription to The Scotsman, you can get unlimited access to the website including our premium content, as well as benefiting from fewer ads, loyalty rewards and much more. Learn More Sorry, there seem to be some issues. Please try again later. Submitting... Well, well, despite all the scare stories, Donald Trump's four-day visit went exactly as planned. Contrary to the dire predictions of some, our policing system was not brought to its knees by a long weekend's work. If our community policing model could just survive the year of extractions caused by the 84/85 Miners Strike, it could surely withstand the extra demands of four days. It was, however, a tricky operation, with more than two venues and a lot of outside exposure for a president who has recently survived two assassination attempts, and appears to be 'catnip' for extremists. Advertisement Hide Ad Advertisement Hide Ad But now that Air Force One is well away and the pointless placards put away 'til next time, we can safely reflect on the fact that the presidential visit has actually benefited our police service. Let me explain. READ MORE: Deer put down after being hit by police car in Aberdeenshire ahead of Trump visit Police Scotland officers guard the Trump Turnberry golf course ahead of Donald Trump's arrival in Scotland (Picture: Christopher Furlong) | Getty Images Ensuring match fitness Police Scotland, whether in its recent national incarceration or its old constituent forces, had a well-deserved reputation for the professional handling of major events. Next to London, Edinburgh had more major and royal events than any other city in the UK. The west of Scotland was also highly experienced. The continuous exposure to the ritual hate fest which is 'Old Firm' football ensures that police in and around Glasgow always knew how to control hostile crowds. But experience has a shelf-life and the preparedness of police forces to deal with complex and major events depends on 'match fitness'. Advertisement Hide Ad Advertisement Hide Ad The last truly major event in Scotland was the initial phase of the funeral of Queen Elizabeth in 2022, and, while it was logistically tricky, there was very little real threat. You have to go back to the COP26 climate summit in Glasgow the previous year to find a major event that tested all aspects of police planning and operations. But that was four years ago, and things change quickly at the top of policing. Almost all the senior officers involved in COP26 have now moved on and been replaced by officers, who though able have not actually been in the hot seat. For you can plan all you like, run exercises all day long, but there is no substitute for the real thing. Regardless of contingencies, things go wrong as soon as real people become involved. Small mistakes can turn into big problems, and before you know it you are reacting to incidents rather than driving the operation. Trump's habit of going 'off script' In the case of President Trump's visit, there were good points and bad. It was not a state visit with high-risk public processions in crowded streets. On the other hand, golf links, while remote, are vast open spaces and difficult to protect. Transport routes were also tricky, with lots of minor roads to be protected from disruption. Advertisement Hide Ad Advertisement Hide Ad And the US Secret Service would have been on edge, with the recent assassination attempts and their president's habit of impromptu 'off-script' behaviour adding to the tension. But in the end, it all came good, as I was sure it would. The plan worked, and all the little things that went wrong were sorted quickly and without fuss. So congratulations to the event 'Gold Commander', Assistant Chief Emma Bond, and all her team. Another big job well done, lessons learned and valuable experience banked.